--> Abstract: Unconventional Gas Traps in the Rocky Mountain Laramide Basins, by R. C. Surdam, Z. S. Jiao, J. E. Buggenhagen, and N. K. Boyd; #90937 (1998).
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Abstract: Unconventional Gas Traps in the Rocky Mountain Laramide Basins

SURDAM, RONALD C., ZUN S. JIAO, JOHN E. BUGGENHAGEN, and NICHOLAS K. BOYD, Institute for Energy Research, University of Wyoming

Summary

The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that there is a new and significantly improved Previous HittechnologyNext Hit for Previous HitexploitingNext Hit Rocky Mountain gas Previous HitresourcesNext Hit (Surdam, 1997a,b). Everyone that has examined the hydrocarbon potential of the Rocky Mountains acknowledges that the gas Previous HitresourcesNext Hit in Laramide Basins are huge; however, it is becoming increasingly apparent that conventional exploration technologies are inadequate to delineate and exploit many of these energy Previous HitresourcesNext Hit. The problem is that conventional exploration strategies and technologies are directed toward detecting and delineating hydrocarbon traps, either structural or stratigraphic. However, the huge, anomalously pressured, gas and gas condensate Previous HitresourcesNext Hit of the Rocky Mountains commonly do not occur as conventional traps, but instead are located in volumes of rock characterized by enhanced porosity and permeability within large, capillary-dominated parts of the stratigraphic column (Surdam et al., 1995). These types of accumulations are best known as basin-center, or deep-basin deposits. An outstanding example of this type of hydrocarbon accumulation is the Jonah field in the northern Greater Green River Basin; this field is confined by neither structural closure nor conventional stratigraphic trapping. Thus, many of these unconventional, anomalously pressured gas and gas condensate accumulations are proving to be transparent to conventional exploration strategies and technologies, so that huge energy Previous HitresourcesTop remain untapped (Surdam, 1992).

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90937©1998 AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition, Salt Lake City, Utah